Bodyguard Kiba: Apocalypse of Carnage
Bodyguard Kiba: Apocalypse of Carnage (修羅の黙示録 ボディーガード牙, Shura no mokushiroku: Bodigaado Kiba), also known as Bodyguard Kiba 2: Combat Apocalypse or simply Bodyguard Kiba 2, is a 1994 Japanese direct-to-video[1] martial arts/action film directed by Takashi Miike. It is the sequel to the 1993 film Bodyguard Kiba and is followed by Bodyguard Kiba: Apocalypse of Carnage 2 (1995), the final part of the trilogy. PlotKiba is once again hired by Tetsugen Daito, head of the Daito Karate dojo. He is promised an incredible fee of 20 million yen to take 25-year-old Natsuki Kirishima to Taiwan and guard her there for a week as she handles some business affairs before meeting up with her lover to move to America. In Taipei, Kiba and Natsuki meet up with Shu, leader of the Taiwan branch of Daito Karate, who houses them in his dojo as a safer alternative to a public hotel. That night four masked fighters with bladed weapons sneak in and attack Kiba in his room but he fights them off. The next day Kiba follows Natsuki to a remote location where he fights off four men wielding bō staffs who flee as tourists with cameras approach. Natsuki refuses to tell Kiba who is after her. Cast
Voices
Production and releaseFollowing the production of Shinjuku Outlaw, the films Bodyguard Kiba: Apocalypse of Carnage and Bodyguard Kiba: Apocalypse of Carnage 2 were shot back-to-back, largely in Taiwan.[2] The film was released direct-to-video[1] on October 22, 1994. Following the success of Audition, Bodyguard Kiba and Bodyguard Kiba: Apocalypse of Carnage were released on DVD in the UK under Tartan's Asia Extreme label.[3] ReceptionIn his book Agitator: The Cinema of Takashi Miike, author Tom Mes writes that the sequels' "lack of quality is a good example of how uneven the director’s output was in the first years of his career. Shot largely in Taiwan from screenplays by Hisao Maki, these sequels represent probably the lowest point in Miike’s career from an artistic point of view. They are listlessly shot, sloppily edited (by Yasushi Shimamura, who would go on to become Miike’s regular editor, greatly improving his skills along the way) and feature universally poor performances by actors whose voices are shoddily dubbed in a poorly delivered mishmash of languages."[2] Mes goes on to criticize the "uninspired martial arts scenes" and particularly the sequences of screenwriter Hisao Maki "working out alone in his karate dojo, bare-chested and his skin gleaming with oil", finding that, "with absolutely no relation to the story, this sequence is no longer just a case of vain self-indulgence, it’s simply masturbatory."[2] In a review of the film for Asian Movie Pulse, reviewer Alexander Knoth criticized the film's "low-level storytelling" and "continuity flaws" but still found it to be a "tribute to classic Hong Kong Martial Arts cinema".[5] SequelThis sequel film was followed by a third Bodyguard Kiba film, Bodyguard Kiba: Apocalypse of Carnage 2 (修羅の黙示録2 ボディーガード牙, Shura no mokushiroku 2: Bodigaado Kiba) (also known as Bodyguard Kiba: Combat Apocalypse 2), which was released on February 3, 1995. References
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